Herbivore

Laurens Legiers, Detour For The View, 2025, oil on canvas, 30 x 24 inches, 75 x 60 cm. Framed: 30.5 x 25 inches. 77.5 x 62.5 cm.

Caroline Larsen, Giverny, 2024, oil on canvas over panel in artist's frame, 43 x 43 inches, 109 x 109 cm.

Hanna Hansdotter, Lotus Print, Marble Mesh, 2025, blown, mirrored glass, 24 x 13 x 13 inches, 63 x 35 x 35 cm.

Carly Owens, Baroque, 2024, oil on canvas, 24 x 20 inches, 61 x 51 cm.

Theo A. Rosenblum, Prick Chair, 2021, wood, foam, wire, resin, plastic, and acrylic, 69 x 48 x 29 inches, 175 x 122 x 74 cm.

Chelsea Seltzer, Asphodel Anthomania, 2025, acrylic on canvas, 71 x 87 inches, 180 x 221 cm.

Ben Godward, Cosmic Inflation (Birth of the Universe, or Why My Horoscope Is Always Right), 2023, urethane resin, 74 x 74 x 12 inches, 188 x 188 x 30 cm.

Pedro Pedro, Flowers in Vase with Lemon, 2022, textile paint on linen, 36 x 39 inches, 91 x 99 cm.

Hein Koh, Chillin, 2025, acrylic, glitter and glazed porcelain, 24 x 11 x 12 inches (with cactus), 61 x 28 x 30 cm.

Kevin Christy, Who Sold Your Intentions, 2024, oil on canvas, 24 x 20 inches, 61 x 51 cm.

E.V. Day, Untitled 16, 2012, Digital C-Print, 60 x 45 inches, 152 x 144 cm.

Andy Dixon, Ant Hamlyn, Ariane Heloise Hughes, Barry McGee, Ben Godward, Carly Owens Weiss, Caroline Larsen, Chelsea Seltzer, E.V. Day, Francesco Igory Deiana, Graphic Rewilding, Hanna Hansdotter, Hein Koh, Kembra Pfahler, Kevin Christy, Laurens Legiers, Michael Assiff, Mona Broschar, Nathan Ritterpusch, Paul Wackers, Pedro Pedro, Sophie Parker, Theo Rosenblum and Vanessa Prager.

The Hole is pleased to present Herbivore, our summer group exhibition. This plant-forward show gathers artists whose works feature flora in all its forms: flowering, fruiting, sprouting and climbing. From succulents to spores, Herbivore considers why artists so often turn to the botanical world—what it represents, what it absorbs, and what possibilities it holds when figuration falters.
 
Across media, the show is lush and abundant. British duo Graphic Rewilding grow an eruption of irises in our front windows, welcoming visitors into a space where living and representational plants intertwine. Refracting light across our garden in the entry gallery are a giant resin flower by Ben Godward and bulbous glass vases blown by Hanna Hansdotter.  Barry McGee’s animatronic tree sculpture tags the gallery wall like a domesticated plant going rogue. Sophie Parker weaves live plants into her sculptural installation, while Hein Koh’s ceramic sculpture sprouts a giant cactus out of a smoking broccoli pot. Later this month a performance piece by Kembra Pfahler will feature flowers from an even more surprising location.
 
Some works in Herbivore revel in abundance: Ant Hamlyn’s Sporegasm, a cluster of soft mushrooms, teems with plush fecundity while Theo Rosenblum’s absurdly hung chair sculpture of a giant weed leaf asks us to take plant sex (and furniture) less seriously. Kevin ChristyAriana Hughes, and Carly Owen Weiss bear fruits, while Caroline LarsenNathan RitterspuschPedro Pedro and Vanessa Prager overflow with florals in dense, painterly detail.
 
The botanical genre you could call it, though it hovers somewhere in the overlap of still life and landscape: Andy Dixon Red Composition with Pomegranite provides a real homage to the masters of still life in a hot pastel pastiche. Laurens Legiers (above) offers small, perplexing paintings where geometric thickets of stippled foliage obscure a traditional old master-style landscape. Is he showing how surface and design have overtaken history and genre—or simply letting his uniquely beautiful paint application method steal focus? 
 
In our past thematic exhibitions like Nature Morte (2021), which revisited the still life, and Manscaping (2022), focused on landscape tropes, we saw how artists return to traditional genres not to repeat them, but to subvert and reanimate. A plant is a subject that carries symbolic weight but allows for formal play—a stand-in for the human figure when a human might say too much—a structure of beauty or a vessel for drama.
 
Plant life is the substrate of our living world—xylem and phloem or gigantic underground mycelium moving unseen beneath the surface— its cycles mirroring our own. It’s why our sick cultural moment demands we “touch grass.” In Herbivore, the artists lean into that fact not as naturalists, but as stylists and symbolists, inviting us to look closely and bathe our retinas in healing green. 
 
We didn’t get as many vegetable paintings and sculptures as anticipated so join us this Thursday at the opening for a gigantic edible vegetable arrangement to round out our garden.

We are delighted to have our neighbor Gotham as a partner for the Herbivore opening event. Gotham is the world's first cannabis concept store—a groundbreaking dispensary where culture and cannabis meet. With rotating art installations and engaging events, Gotham is a living, breathing expression of New York's creativity and complexity. Visit them at 3 E 3rd St New York, NY 10003, or one of their other 3 locations.

Graphic Rewilding, IRIS UPON IRIS UPON IRIS #1, 2024, acrylic on linen, 118 x 71 inches, 300 x 180 cm.

Graphic Rewilding, IRIS UPON IRIS UPON IRIS #2, 2024, acrylic on linen, 118 x 71 inches, 300 x 180 cm.

Ben Godward, Cosmic Inflation (Birth of the Universe, or Why My Horoscope Is Always Right), 2023, urethane resin, 74 x 74 x 12 inches, 188 x 188 x 30 cm.

Hanna Hansdotter, Lotus Print, Marble Mesh, 2025, blown, mirrored glass, 24 x 13 x 13 inches, 63 x 35 x 35 cm.

Hanna Hansdotter, Lotus Print, Lime, 2025, blown, mirrored glass, 24 x 13 x 13 inches, 61 x 35 x 35 cm.

Vanessa Prager, Ceremony, 2023, oil on canvas, 96 x 72 inches, 244 x 183 cm.

Laurens Legiers, Just Passing By, 2025, oil on canvas, 20 x 16 inches, 50 x 40 cm. Framed: 21 x 17 inches, 52.5 x 42.5 cm.

Laurens Legiers, Detour For The View, 2025, oil on canvas, 29.5 x 24 inches, 75 x 60 cm. Framed: 30.5 x 25 inches, 77.5 x 62.5 cm.

Carly Owens, Baroque, 2024, oil on canvas, 24 x 20 inches, 61 x 51 cm.

Ariane Heloise Hughes, For John Randolf Beaumont, 2024, oil on linen, 10 x 10 inches, 25 x 25 cm.

Barry Mcgee, Tagger Tree, 2008, artificial plant, mannequin, mechanical parts, mixed media, 72 x 36 x 36 inches, 183 x 91 x 91 m (sculpture, tag dimensions variable)

Hein Koh, Chillin’, 2025, acrylic, glitter and glazed porcelain (cactus optional) 24 x 11 x 12 inches (with cactus), 61 x 28 x 30 cm.

Kevin Christy, Who Sold Your Intentions, 2024, oil on canvas, 24 x 20 inches, 61 x 51 cm. Framed: 25 x 21 x 2.5 inches, 64 x 53 x 6 cm.

Michael Assiff, Untitled (Steel Mill, Rosa Multiflora, Bent Line Carpet Moth), 2025, Methacrylic and latex on canvas 48 x 36 inches, 122 x 91 cm.

Paul Wackers, Loneliness of the Brightest One, 2025 acrylic, spray paint on canvas 48 x 40 inches, 122 x 102 cm.

Chelsea Seltzer, Asphodel Anthomania, 2025 acrylic on canvas, 71 x 87 inches, 180 x 221 cm.

Ant Hamlyn, Sporegasm, 2025, hand sewn polyurethane coated fabrics, fibre stuffing, perspex, painted timber, wing nuts 31 x 24 x 3.5 inches, 80 x 60 x 9 cm.

E.V. Day & Kembra Pfahler, Untitled 16, 2012, Digital C-Print, 60 x 45 inches, 152 x 144 cm.

Andy Dixon, Red Composition with Pomegranate, 2025, acrylic on canvas, 46 x 55 inches, 117 x 140 cm.

Caroline Larsen, Giverny, 2024, oil on canvas over panel in artist’s frame 43 x 43 inches, 109 x 109 cm.

Mona Broschar, Guardian II, 2023, acrylic and oil on canvas 90 x 51 inches 230 x 130 cm.

Theo A. Rosenblum, Prick Chair, 2021, wood, foam, wire, resin, plastic, and acrylic 69 x 48 x 29 inches, 175 x 122 x 74 cm.

Theo A. Rosenblum, The Fool Who Persists In His Foolishness Will Soon Become Wise (Weed Chair), 2023, polychromed wood, 52 x 34 x 28 inches, 132 x 86 x 71 cm.

Nathan Ritterpusch, Flower #16, 2021, oil on canvas, 48 x 36 inches, 122 x 91 cm.

Francesco Igory Deiana, Apple2, 2025, acrylic, latex, one-shot enamel on canvas 36 x 30 inches, 91 x 76 cm.

Bowery

312 Bowery
New York City, NY 10012

+1 212 466 1100

Tribeca

86 Walker St.
New York City, NY 10013

+1 212 343 3100

Los Angeles

844 N La Brea Ave.
Los Angeles, CA 90038

+1 323 297 3288